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October 14, 2002 | National Law Journal

Anchors Aweigh

The FTC's approval of merger proposals in the cruise industry shows not a radical change in enforcement policy but the benefits of figuring out the facts.
9 minute read
January 06, 2003 | National Law Journal

On the Move

3 minute read
October 07, 2002 | National Law Journal

Home Improvement

The Supreme Court should kill an unfair housing strategy with no basis in law.
11 minute read
June 03, 2002 | National Law Journal

Everyman Behind Bars

You Got Nothing Coming, a prison memoir by Jimmy A. Lerner, is an honest account of life in prison at a time when budgets and politicians are devolving "correctional" institutions back into hard-time prisons.
10 minute read
January 22, 2002 | National Law Journal

FTC's New Show of Force

It is the newest and most formidable weapon in the Federal Trade Commission`s arsenal. Now, if only the commission could figure out exactly how to use it.
7 minute read
Law Journal Press | Digital Book New Jersey Business Litigation 2025 Authors: Paul A. Rowe, Andrea J. Sullivan View this Book

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January 28, 2002 | National Law Journal

Sleepless in Saxony

Johann Sebastian Bach never thought his compositions would outlive him. The popularity of the Goldberg Variations would have been his biggest surprise of all.
9 minute read
April 29, 2002 | National Law Journal

Satisfaction Survey

Minorities aren`t too pleased with their firms, according to an AmLaw survey.
5 minute read
October 28, 2002 | National Law Journal

Looks Like Justice

Courts that keep treating administrative hearings as trials might be tempting the government to provide fewer procedural rights in the first place.
9 minute read
September 03, 2002 | National Law Journal

Will We Be Safe at Home?

The proposed Department of Homeland Security might actually risk our security while also cutting back on civil liberties.
8 minute read
January 03, 2005 | National Law Journal

Profs Create Plan for Limits on High Court Service

How long is too long? A group of law professors is floating a proposal that would limit each future justice to 18 years on the Supreme Court bench.
7 minute read

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